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Wellness & IV Therapy · Phoenix, Arizona

IV Therapy in Phoenix

Intravenous infusions of vitamins, minerals, hydration, glutathione, and specialty compounds like NAD+ delivered directly into the bloodstream for energy, recovery, immune support, and anti-aging. Compare Phoenix clinics below and request a free consultation.

Typical cost in Phoenix

$100–$1,000

per infusion · USD

A general range for Phoenix, rounded for guidance. Confirm exact pricing with each clinic.

Clinic directory

IV Therapy clinics in Phoenix

Featured clinics appear first. Tap any clinic to view details and request a consultation.

BHRC Paradise Valley

Paradise Valley · Phoenix

4.9 (126) · Google

A Paradise Valley/Scottsdale-area medical spa offering the full range of body contouring, lasers, injectables, HydraFacial, and skin treatments, all performed by NPs, PAs, or MDs.

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Local insights

Where to find IV Therapy in Phoenix

1 clinic offer IV Therapy across the Phoenix metro — with providers in Paradise Valley. Phoenix's established aesthetic clusters around Biltmore, Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, where pricing typically runs at the upper end of the local range.

Local cost for IV Therapy in Phoenix typically falls between $100–$1,000 per infusion . Compare the 1 listed clinic above, request consultations from your top picks, and confirm exact pricing directly with each provider.

About IV Therapy

Intravenous infusions of vitamins, minerals, hydration, glutathione, and specialty compounds like NAD+ delivered directly into the bloodstream for energy, recovery, immune support, and anti-aging.

Sessions

Single sessions or weekly/monthly memberships

Downtime

None — return to normal activity immediately

Good candidate

Anyone seeking energy, recovery, hydration, immune support, anti-aging benefits, or relief from hangovers, jet lag, or post-workout fatigue

  • 100% absorption directly into the bloodstream — bypasses digestion
  • Immediate effects for hydration and energy; cumulative benefits for NAD+ and anti-aging
  • Customizable formulations (Myers, Beauty, Immunity, Hangover, NAD+, etc.)
  • Most appointments take 30–60 minutes with no recovery
Read the full IV Therapy guide →
FAQ

IV Therapy in Phoenix: common questions

How much does IV Therapy cost in Phoenix?

Typical IV Therapy pricing in Phoenix runs $100–$1,000 per infusion. The biggest variables are the provider's experience level and the specific device or product used — newer technology and senior injectors price at the upper end. Pricing is quoted in US dollars (USD). Request a consultation from any of our listed Phoenix clinics for a personalized quote.

How many IV Therapy providers are in Phoenix?

ClinicCompass lists 1 verified Phoenix-area clinic offering IV Therapy, concentrated in Paradise Valley. Each listing includes real Google ratings so you can compare reputable options side by side before booking a consultation.

Who's the top-rated IV Therapy provider in Phoenix?

Among our 1 listed Phoenix provider for IV Therapy, BHRC Paradise Valley currently holds the highest verified Google rating at 4.9★ across 126+ reviews (located in Paradise Valley). "Best" is subjective — compare 2–3 Phoenix clinics before committing.

How often should I get IV therapy?

Depends on goals. As-needed (hangover, illness, post-flight): single sessions when needed. General wellness: monthly maintenance is common. Athletic performance: weekly during heavy training. NAD+ anti-aging: standard loading series of 5–10 sessions over 2–4 weeks, then monthly or quarterly maintenance. More than monthly without a specific reason is usually more ritual than evidence — your kidneys excrete excess water-soluble vitamins.

Who shouldn't get IV therapy?

Patients with congestive heart failure, severe kidney disease, or significant electrolyte disorders should avoid IV therapy without medical clearance. NAD+ specifically should be avoided in pregnancy, certain cancers, and severe heart disease. High-dose vitamin C is contraindicated in G6PD deficiency. Anyone with bleeding disorders or severe vein issues should disclose this. A Phoenix med spa nurse should review your medical history before any first-time IV session.

How much does IV therapy cost?

Standard IV drips (Myers' Cocktail, hydration, vitamin C, immunity) typically run $150–$300 per session in the US. Premium formulations with glutathione, B12 boosters, or beauty add-ins run $250–$400. NAD+ infusions are the premium tier at $500–$1,000+ per session due to the cost of the NAD+ itself. Most med spas offer membership pricing — typically $99–$199/month for monthly drips with discounted add-ons. B12 injections (the IM shot, not IV) are much cheaper at $25–$50.

Does IV therapy actually work, or is it a placebo?

Honest answer: depends what you're using it for. **Strong evidence**: IV hydration genuinely treats dehydration faster than oral intake; IV iron, B12, and high-dose vitamin C have clear medical applications. **Weaker evidence** for wellness IVs in healthy people — most healthy adults don't have nutrient deficiencies that an IV would correct. The energy/wellness benefits many people report are partly the placebo of taking 45 minutes for self-care plus the immediate effect of hydration. NAD+ has growing but still early research support for cellular energy and anti-aging. Bottom line: helpful for specific situations (hangover, post-workout, post-flight, illness recovery); less validated as routine maintenance.

What is a Myers' Cocktail?

The Myers' Cocktail is the most popular IV drip formula — invented by Dr. John Myers in the 1970s. Standard formulation: magnesium, calcium, vitamins B5, B6, B12, B-complex, and vitamin C in a saline base. Marketed for: energy, immune support, fatigue, migraines, fibromyalgia, and general wellness. Takes 30–45 minutes. Typically $175–$275 at US med spas. It's the entry-level IV most patients try first.

What does NAD+ IV therapy do?

NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) is a coenzyme critical to cellular energy production that declines significantly with age. IV NAD+ supplementation is marketed for: anti-aging, cognitive clarity, addiction recovery, athletic recovery, and chronic fatigue. The research is genuinely promising for cellular aging benefits but still developing — much of the strongest data comes from animal studies. Patients report feeling more focused and energetic; some describe an immediate sense of well-being. Sessions take 2–4 hours (it's a slow infusion to prevent side effects). Cost: $500–$1,000+ per session, often done as a 5–10 session loading series.

Are there side effects from IV therapy?

Common: cold sensation during infusion, vitamin taste in the mouth (from B vitamins), mild flushing. Less common: nausea, headache, dizziness, bruising at injection site. NAD+ specifically can cause chest tightness, flushing, or muscle aches during the infusion — these resolve when the infusion rate is slowed. Rare but serious: vein irritation/phlebitis, infection at the IV site, allergic reaction. As with any injectable, the provider's experience matters significantly — choose med spas with licensed nurses and proper sterile technique.

How often should I get IV therapy?

Depends on your goals. **Acute use** (hangover, illness recovery, post-flight): single sessions as needed. **General wellness**: most patients do monthly maintenance. **Athletic recovery**: weekly during training; bi-weekly during off-season. **NAD+ for anti-aging**: typically a loading series of 5–10 sessions over 2–4 weeks, then monthly or quarterly maintenance. Many med spas offer monthly membership packages that work out to roughly $99–$199/month with discounted add-ons.

What's the difference between IV therapy and just taking vitamins?

IV therapy delivers nutrients directly into the bloodstream at 100% absorption rate, bypassing digestion entirely. Oral vitamins have variable absorption — typically 10–50% depending on the nutrient, your gut health, and what you ate with them. For people with absorption issues (Crohn's, celiac, post-bariatric surgery) or specific deficiencies (B12 in vegetarians), IV is genuinely more effective. For most healthy adults with a decent diet, the practical difference is smaller than marketing suggests — oral vitamins work fine if you're not deficient.

Who shouldn't get IV therapy?

Patients with congestive heart failure, severe kidney disease, or specific electrolyte disorders should avoid IV therapy without medical clearance — the fluid load and mineral content can be dangerous. NAD+ specifically should be avoided in pregnancy, certain cancers, and severe heart disease. Anyone with a history of severe vein issues, blood clotting disorders, or G6PD deficiency (relevant for high-dose vitamin C) should disclose this. A med spa nurse should review your medical history before any first-time IV session.

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